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TIME Magazine's "Top Ten Weirdest Theme Parks"


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^^really?! that truly comes as a complete shock to me. whenever my grandparents take a vacation to florida, the holy land experience is almost always on their itinerary.

i can understand some people thinking of it as a terrible idea for a theme park, but it's supposed to be a biblical themed park, which tells stories from the bible, not to be a place like disney or universal.

dollywood's made me laugh, it basically said, 'dollywood is one of the weirdest theme parks because it's a number one attraction in tennessee and dolly parton is part owner.'

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^^really?! that truly comes as a complete shock to me. whenever my grandparents take a vacation to florida, the holy land experience is almost always on their itinerary.

i can understand some people thinking of it as a terrible idea for a theme park, but it's supposed to be a biblical themed park, which tells stories from the bible, not to be a place like disney or universal.

dollywood's made me laugh, it basically said, 'dollywood is one of the weirdest theme parks because it's a number one attraction in tennessee and dolly parton is part owner.'

Have you ever actually been there?

I went on their 1 free day of the year. (By offering free admission 1 day every year, the park gets a property-tax exemption and gets to be classified as a religious entity; seems like BS to me.)

Getting your picture taken with a face character of Jesus then being invited to witness an extremely graphic representation of his crucifixion is not my idea of family fun. Definitely a weird park.

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So basically, the only thing TIME finds weird about the park is Dolly's association. They even point out the "weird" attractions like Dolly's Demolition Derby and Dollywood Express, just to try to insinuate that many, many attractions are named after her in some sort of voyeuristic off-brand way. It's as if they ask, what role could music by a country singer have in a park?

I wonder if they'd have said Disneyland was weird in the 1950s, all because of blatant connections to the middle-aged animator and amusement park novice? Perhaps they'd ask, what role could animated characters by a cartoon artist have in a park?

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